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B.C. to remove barriers for international workers

The B.C. government will introduce new legislation to speed up and simplify the process for internationally trained professionals to have their certifications recognized so they can work in the province. Richard Zussman reports. – Oct 10, 2023

Internationally trained workers from more than two dozen professions will be able to enter B.C.’s labour force faster.

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The province introduced new legislation Monday aimed at reducing barriers for skilled workers as the province grapples with a labour shortage.

Premier David Eby said the province cannot leave people with talent and experience on the sidelines, given the labour shortages that B.C. is facing now and in the coming years.

“We have many unfair processes that force new arrivals to British Columbia to go through incredibly complex, contradictory, hard-to-understand, expensive, repetitive processes that are frustrating and ultimately cause people to give up and work in a field that they’re not trained in,” the premier said during a news conference.

Eby said those unfair steps include redundant language testing and a “catch-22” requirement for work experience in Canada before obtaining accreditation.

He said newcomers must account for at least one-third of more than one million jobs expected to open over the next decade if those positions are to be filled.

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The new law would require regulatory bodies to remove “unfair barriers” for 29 professions, including veterinarians, lawyers, teachers, paramedics, early childhood educators, architects and natural resource professionals, Eby said.

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The act builds on work the B.C. government has been doing to reduce barriers for internationally trained health-care workers, he added.

“More than 500 internationally educated doctors have gone through our expedited process with the College of Physicians to be able to start work, and we have nearly 3,000 more nurses that are already applying to come through that process as well.”

Andrew Mercier, the minister of state for workforce development, said he’s heard from professionals who have struggled to work in their field after moving to B.C. and one conversation with an engineer from Iran has stuck with him in particular.

The engineer went through the process of having his credentials recognized, but he was told he needed two years of relevant work experience in Canada, Mercier said.

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“What he told me was, ‘My 20 years in Iran was not worth one single day in Canada,'” the minister said.

“We’re going to be removing that barrier.”

The legislation would also end duplication in English-language testing, Mercier said, adding he’s heard numerous times about “the cost and the affront to dignity of constantly retesting language skills” among workers already living in B.C.

He said the new law, set to take effect next summer, would establish maximum processing timelines for regulatory bodies and enhance transparency by mandating those regulators to share details on their assessment processes.

If passed, Mercier said the legislation would also create a new superintendent responsible for promoting fair credential recognition and enforcing compliance.

The act affects 18 regulatory authorities, the province said in a statement.

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